Laptop Windows 7 won't boot, even in safe mode and cannot get the USB boot either

Saeid_3

Commendable
Aug 26, 2016
2
0
1,510
Greetings everyone

Sorry about my broken English.
I have an issue with my Sony Vaio VGN-fw laptop. I woke up to see my laptop stuck in Windows 7 logo loading screen and not booting completely and restarting after some time and then boot half way through and stuck in the win7 logo again.
Windows 7 fails to go into safe mode too. it stuck at "classpnp.sys" and restarts the laptop after minutes stucking at classpnp.
and when I go to recovery section it is extremely slow and takes hours to load and when the first windows pops up it say that the windows is in drive E but i had only 2 drives and my windows was in drive C.

I remember last time I was using my laptop my hard disk (Specially the C drive) was full and i had only few hundred megabits empty space on it. i also had issues with my charger and my laptop used to turn off by itself bc the battery without giving me any notification about low battery.

I have another issue with bootable USB drive. my CD/DVD drive is broken so I'm trying to boot from a USB drive to see if I can repair my laptop but I fail in that too. I prepared 2 bootable USB, one ubuntu and the other is Win7 32. I tested each on my PC and both USBs boot perfectly in my PC but when i want to boot any of them in my laptop after setting the 1st priority to External device and enabling it, the USBs just won't boot, it goes to a black screen with a white dash blinking endlessly :l

My brother has exactly the same healthy laptop, I tried the USB on his laptop and they don't work in his laptop either.
it's Aptio Setup Utility version 1.23
Here's the picture what boot configlooks like:
http://qa.support.sony.jp/solution/S1003151073876/bios1.gif


any help would appreciated
 
Solution
Some laptops restrict booting to external devices, since you can't boot two of the same model with them, you may just have one of those systems.

Full drive will cause boot and slowness issues, and the computer turning off suddenly can also cause hard drive issues with generating bad sectors or causing physical damage, which in time could become too much for the error correction in Windows to keep up with, causing the system to not boot.

Borrow your brother's DVD player from his laptop, and use that to install Windows again. I strongly suggest replacing the hard drive first as you will likely find out that is where your issue is.
Some laptops restrict booting to external devices, since you can't boot two of the same model with them, you may just have one of those systems.

Full drive will cause boot and slowness issues, and the computer turning off suddenly can also cause hard drive issues with generating bad sectors or causing physical damage, which in time could become too much for the error correction in Windows to keep up with, causing the system to not boot.

Borrow your brother's DVD player from his laptop, and use that to install Windows again. I strongly suggest replacing the hard drive first as you will likely find out that is where your issue is.
 
Solution